Ah, Comrade Kirk! I see you’ll be joining us in the Collective.

 

From Sploid. My country makes the American news; and golly gee, I couldn’t be prouder.

The communists who run Canada held a bizarre secret “tribunal” that made ancient Egyptian religion the equal of Christianity and outlawed the marketing of Mr. Spock figurines as “toys.”

Canada’s International Trade Tribunal issued the sweeping rulings to stop the Franklin Mint, a U.S. trinket manufacturer, from claiming its collectibles of Star Trek characters, cartoon harlot Betty Boop and “Wizard of Oz” midgets “amuse and please” the Canadians who buy the things.

And quite rightly, too. Have you ever seen that crap? We don’t need none of your kitten-o-the-month-club commemorative plates and pink porcelain unicorn music boxes (with Elvis figure, if you order now!) to amuse us.

Not when we have you people.

awwwwww, why don’t *I* get any flamewars?

TIAJeez, I go offline for a lousy four or five days and everybody gets a flamewar except me! Even Boris. Pooey. Phooey, even, and I mean that.

Why don’t I get cool hatemail like the Pastafarians? This one even has several people using the same name to fight one another, like someone with MPD with self-hatred issues. Far more interesting than anything on daytime tv, and yep, the lawyer references flew thick and fast.

Them Christians! They always got a lawyer handy. Mind you, if I wrote comments like that to imaginary beings, I would probably see the wisdom in having someone on retainer, too, if only a psychiatrist.

The Kittens!!! Think of the Kittens!!!

I do believe you are

I do believe you are a fucking retard and I hope you burn in hell. Fuck you and the flying spaghetti monster. Postmodernism is a self defeating concept. Read Josh McDowell’s book for a good overview of what life is truly about you dumbass humanist. You obviously think life is just a big damn joke. Its all for humor and entertainment. I look forward to the day it fucks you right in the ass. Oh the age of the earth doesn’t fucking matter! Technology, hell we’d be better of without it anyways. God is not a flying spaghetti monster because only a human could think up such a dumbass retarded idea like that. Intelligent Design is observable. It does not require faith, it requires the ability to understand what irreducible complexity is along with several other phenomena that has been discovered in Science. Evolution is a conjecture. Of course, an idiot of your brain size would probably believe we came from monkeys…and quite frankly, you are probably the best evidence that Evolutionists have that human beings came from a monkey. I’m still having problems teaching my dog 2+2=4. I hope to someday prove Darwinian philosophy and be able to have my dog recite Shakespeare to me. Then I will believe Evolution is true. Until then….its all a big damn joke. Charles Darwin went insane when he was 28 anyways (didn’t know that did you?) Let me put it this way to you concerning your bologna flying spaghetti monster. If we are created in the image of what you believe God to be, we would look like spaghetti. Common sense is a valuable asset. Lets try this…I’m going to go very sloooooowly for you Bobby. Retarded people…like Bobby Henderson….will burn in hell unless you give your life to Jesus Christ. Life is not hard. Neither is it a joke. But I believe that anybody with a brain the size of a peanut should be exposed for the fraud that the person is. Quite frankly, I do not know why I’m wasting my time…because you are probably too stupid to read this e-mail anyways. At any rate, I have better things to do than point out your circular reasoning within your arguments. You are a disgrace to anything that humanity or your stupid existentialistic philosophy represents.

Casey Powell

Severe Flamewar risk!!!

*update*

Unless you want to be sued, take my name off of that message.  Thanks.

Casey Powell

*update 2*

Just take the whole message off of the board!  I gave you no permission to
post that.  I want it off, or I will contact my lawyer.  And that is not a
joke.

Casey Powell

*note from Bobby * – I’m not going to take your name off the message.  However, I will henceforth refer to you as either C. Powell or Casey P. so that you remain anonymous.  Additionally, I’ll include your email address here, in case anyone needs to get in touch with you. *

jesusmarine2005@yahoo.com

The updates continue through #7, FYI.Flamewar! Don protective equipment!

So why am I posting that, legal threats and email and all? Because I want to siphon off some of this red-hot lava and reap the toasty, litigious benefits for Operation Global Media Domination on the ol’ raincoaster blog, that’s why.

Nobody’s threatened me in days! True, I did get mentioned in connection to a Plagiarist of the Year contest, but it was more in reference to me being ripped off than me ripping anyone off: I’m not eligible to win anything except smug satisfaction, and as everyone knows, I already have plenty of that.

His noodly appendage

Touched by his noodly appendage

A refresher, for anyone who is unacquainted with Pastafarianism and the Flying Spaghetti Monster and is unable to access Wikipedia because he or she is living in, say, Riyadh or, no, that won’t work, a world of his own imagination (yeah, that’ll work; that or his parents’ basement and he doesn’t want them to catch him online past his bedtime), Pastafarianism is the religion founded by a man who noticed that Creationists were using the law to force “equal time” teaching of their theory. He decided, with a self-reliance which would warm the cockles of L.Ron’s heart, if he weren’t dead, that he’d create a cockamamie religious theory and force that into the courts as well, perhaps (in)advertently showing the arbitrary and illogical nature of the Creationists‘ argument for equal time in the first place.

But it’s not like there’s no video.

You show me the Jesus YouTube; then we’ll talk.

mindless filler 2.0: the part with the vampire

Not just the nun. See? Part One is here.

Indonesian Vampire

So, it was a souvenir shop after all. Cunningly hidden away in the bureaucratic depths of a Catholic girls’ school lies the best souvenir shop in Ambon, and why is anybody’s guess. Perhaps they didn’t want people stopping by on their way home from work to pray at the ancestor statues or sumpin’.

In any case, the room was chock-full o’ the best stuff I’d seen in Indonesia: real ikat, some batik brought from Java, beautiful wooden ancestor figure statues of all sizes from the 3′ doorstop models to the 2″ iAncestorFigure that was supposed to go into battle with you. The idea was, you had your main statue at home and when you were heading for a fight you prayed and sorta downloaded Uncle Sam or whoever into this little figurine that you wore around your neck. And the reason they were for sale, we were informed by the Enormous Nun, was that without the praying they were just a hunk of wood, nothing special, and the ancestors didn’t mind, in fact, having likely been upgraded to new, shinier statues. Apparently while North Americans keep up with the Joneses by buying newer, shinier SUVs and BBQ’s, in Indonesia you do it by getting newer, shinier statues in which to keep your ancestors’ spirits.

Crazy, eh?

Anyway, I collected a portable ancestor and a shelftop model as I trundled around the room. There were shopping baskets there, woven palm ones, but I didn’t plan on spending that much money, nor did my friend, who, it soon became obvious, was neither a fabric expert nor a doll collector.

The room was about 20×10, and lined with cabinets of curiosity and curiousness, with a large thing in the centre that would have been a kitchen island if it had been in North America but was instead a sort of glass-topped and -sided sarcophagus of nifty things, not excluding said ancestor spirit storage units.

And there was fabric.

Like I said, there was ikat, which is sort of like tie dye, only you tie and dye before you even weave it together, so it ends up looking a little like someone with Parkinson’s handpainted your sarong. I’m more of a batik girl, myself, but we were really at the wrong end of Indonesia for that.

There were a few hanks of batik, and by the look of it the stuff was at least fifty years old if not more. Nothing fabulous; no multihued butterflies or arabesques; just some servicable stamped designs and a few swirls in two colours, very primitive stuff.

And you know how, when you’re out with someone you don’t know all that well and you sense that things aren’t going so shit-hot for them that day because maybe they, say, endured a 45-minute long death-defying pedicab ride into the bad part of town only to end up at a Catholic girls’s school and then wanted to turn around but you wouldn’t let them and then they found out you were right; and you want to cheer them up a bit, so you ask them a question that you already know the answer to, because they don’t know you well enough to know you already know the answer, but you know they’re an expert in the field and you figure it’ll give them a little boost to tell you?

“So,” I said, “is it true that real batik is the same on both sides and the printed stuff isn’t?”

Pause. Long pause. “Uh,” said my new friend, “no.”

The nun watched and nodded meaningfully at me and said nothing. My friend continued to browse, although she was more interested in the bowls and knives than the fabrics.

She didn’t buy any dolls, either.

“It’s a shame the archbishop’s not here,” said the nun after while. “He always likes to meet the Europeans and Americans who pass through. Oh, such an interesting man, the archbishop. He wrote this book on the handicrafts of the local people,” and she thrust the enormous hardcover into my hands like she was passing a football. I took the cue and bought the book immediately. I’m too smart to mess with any nuns. Besides, they’d never find my body; I’d probably get sold to a wandering Dutchman as “a mummied ancestor figure from Kei Besar.” I flipped through the book and asked idly where they archbishop was.

“Oh,” she said, “He’s out talking to the headman of another island. He goes around and visits, you know, doing missionary work. The headmen will talk to him.”

“Is it true,” I asked, already knowing the answer for lo, I am a knowitall, just ask me, “that they call them headmen because they’ve collected the most heads?”

“Oh yes,” she said, smiling, “But they’re very polite. They never do it when the archbishop is there.”

And right about then, something caught my eye. A little thing, smaller than an ancestor figure, about the size of your two fists put together, knuckle to knuckle. It was carved from bone, and slightly burnt at the edges; it had obviously been around, and in a country as surreal as Indonesia, that is really saying something.

A vampire.

Now, just as Indonesian milkshakes tend to differ from North American milkshakes (I particularly recommend the avocado) Indonesian vampires differ markedly from regular old plain-vanilla Transylvanian ones.

For one thing, they are the animated corpses of vengeful, evil women who haunt their enemies and essentially terrify them to death. Whole islands have been quarantined because of rumoured vampire infestations. For another, the whole body doesn’t rise from the grave; oh no, that would be so ordinary, so simple, in a way so innocent.

No: the head, spine, and viscera rise from the grave on bat wings and fly around, sucking blood, causing miscarrriages, and spreading terror and disease. Highly original.

Puntianak: In Indonesia, a universally feared terrible female ghost, who haunts the living and causes miscarriages or stillbirths..she died in childbirth and her open, bloody vulva can be clearly seen, a sure sign of witchcraft. She hates men, so she will appear to them as a ravishing beauty but when one tries to make love to her, she will tear off his genitals. When a woman has died in childbirth, some Indonesian people will nail her hair to the coffin so that she cannot rise to cause misfortune.

Penanggalan: In Malaysia, it is said a woman may become the devil’s apprentice. She will learn to fly, but only her head with the entrails attached to it will actually fly, while the rest of her body stays behind. She will suck the blood of her enemies at night.

Witch: In the Minahassa in Sulawesi, a witch is said to be a type of person who can send her head and intestines flying through the air, with her ears (or, in some cases, her lungs) functioning as wings. Sometimes the head and intestines change into a bird or a mouse so that the witch can enter the house of her intended victim unnoticed.

In Malay, such witches are called penanggalan, “the one who pulls out” (the innards from the body). The intention of the witch is to drink her victim’s blood, especially the blood of a woman after childbirth. Witches may learn their art from an evil spirit but usually it is inherited. They operate at night and if the head and guts are not back with the body by dawn, the witch will die. To cause this to happen the body, if found, can be hidden. The Malays hang thorny branches at the entrance of their houses to that the guts may get entangled, thereby trapping the witch.

from Pacific Mythology, an encyclopedia of myth and legend, by Jan Knappert.

I tell ya, Indonesia is a barrel of laughs. cf they’re very polite. They never do it when the archbishop is there

So there was this little vampire, with pointy ears and huge, glaring eyes, and what looks very much like a spine with some nasty bits attached to it, and the whole thing is carved out of one fairly large piece of solid bone and has, at some time, been thrown into a fire and I don’t blame them a bit, whoever it was.

So I had to have it.

Casually, I looked up and asked the nun, “So, what kind of bone is this?” thinking probably cow but maybe, ew, orangutan, which I would not be up for, them being endangered and all, but no.

“Oh, human I think,” she said, merrily.

85,000 rupiah, and cheap at twice the price. Every now and again a visitor to my place reaches for it, asking, “What’s this thing,” and I have yet to fail to stop them from touching it.

It’s just not a good idea to go around my house touching things. Some of us bite.

Mindless filler about the time I was in the Catholic girls’ school in Indonesia with the CIA agent

Or at least I think she was a CIA agent. Stop me if you’ve heard this one, but it’s a good one so stop me very gently. With chocolate.

Wasn’t that a line in Heathers?

Part Two is here.

Anyway, so there I was, with the CIA agent. She told me she was a fabric expert and doll collector, and she and her husband owned a computer consulting company back in Alexandria, Virginia. And they weren’t the least bit like a married couple, but that’s neither here nor there. When they were in Asia they spoke German to one another, and when they were in Europe they spoke Thai, so nobody would know what they were saying.

Two wholesome Americans who just happened to be from Alexandria, Virginia and who just happened to speak several different languages, and who just happened to have spent six months on Bali for no particular reason.

So there we were in Ambon. Let me tell you about Ambon.

It’s an armpit. It’s the armpit of Satan’s smelly friend that even Satan can’t stand. The people are very nice, though. And they have a lot of handicrafts. Tons and tons of handicrafts. Oyster-shell bas-reliefs were very popular, set on red or black velvet and yes, there was an Elvis there although there tended to be more in the way of florals, koi, and Yangtse vistas, the Chinese market being the most prosperous. And there were wee tchochkes made of cloves. It’s the Spice Islands, right? Lots and lots of things made of cloves. Boxes. Pirate ship scale models. Castles. Unicorns. And you know what? Cloves are hideous to look at. Seriously, they look like the dried tonails of a poisonous lizard or something.

So there was a dearth of good souvenirs in Ambon. So, naturally, the CIA agent (female operative; or at least she seemed to operate just fine to the naked eye) and I decided to steal Alain’s Lonely Planet guidebook, for yea, even the CIA is useless in foreign territory without said Lonely Planet, and set off for Rinkamaya, which the Lonely Planet said was the best souvenir shop in town.

So we went. And, 45-minutes later we stood outside said Rinkamaya, which had streams of little girls in uniforms and big nuns in habits going in and out of the doors. The CIA agent and I looked at one another and we agreed, “This is a Catholic girls’ school.”

She was all for leaving, but I hadn’t braved a 45-minute, death-defying ride in a pedicab for nothing, and I’d be damned if I was going home with a fucking clove-stick Elvis, so in we went.

A tiny Indonesia nun was the first to see us. Her eyes got huge and she hissed, “Engerissss!” and made patting motions with her hands before disappearing entirely. The CIA agent took this to mean that firepower was imminent, and suggested we leave again. I resisted, faking more knowledge of Indonesian hand gestures than I actually had.

We stood there for about fifteen minutes while little girls ran in, laughed at us, and ran away again. Some of them came several times, and I am grateful to have brought such joy to the lives of some apparently entertainment-starved children.

Eventually, a huge nun materialized. Seriously, she was about the size of a Packard and about the same vintage; she’d been on Ambon since the Second World War, and she was “the” nun who spoke English, although with a heavy Dutch accent. She said, “You’re here for souvenirs. Come this way,” and proceeded to lead us through a maze of cubicles made of solid teak panels four feet across. We wound our way through there for so long even I, with all my Girl Guide and orienteering awards, couldn’t have picked North out of a catalog, but finally we ended up in the center, which was, as advertised, a souvenir shop.

I’ll have to tell you about the vampire later, time’s up at the Internet Cafe!

raincoaster rawk

raincoaster blues, by raincoaster and a choir of seraphim

Yet another art form to conquer. Those band sites get a lot of hits, y’all! I’m going to have a release party just as soon as the seraphim finish with their recent responsibilities in the Middle East. “Don’t worry,” they say, “If we’ve done this once, we’ve done it a million times.”

45-generator via the Generator Blog.